Winter UpdateSnow will cling to limbs above and crunch under your feet as you hike through the Osage orange tunnel at Sugarcreek MetroPark. Listen carefully for the sounds of songbirds as you hike through the park and enjoy the many trails. Great for recreation, this park is often bustling with runners and walkers. Bring your kids to enjoy the Nature Play Area, or stop by the Three Sisters. Nature programs often take place at this park, so check the schedule for upcoming opportunities to get outside.

Work on Sugarcreek’s trails is under way, which will convert existing hiking trails into sustainable trails. Working with the land and sculpting trails using natural contours, sustainable trails reduce erosion and create large swaths of undisturbed habitat. When opened, new trails sections may be hazardous until the surface has been compacted by use. Please use caution.

Attention Trail Users
Seasonal freezing and thawing temperatures are contributing to unpleasant conditions on our new trail sections. Please bear with us. Weather permitting, staff will be out soon to address these issues. Think spring!

Three 550 year old oak trees, a tall grass prairie, woodlands and scenic Sugar Creek
beckon visitors. Although much of Sugarcreek's 618 acres were once farmland, MetroParks
land management practices and natural processes have resulted in a variety of habitats.
These support diverse wildlife that can be discovered as you hike, horseback ride
or enjoy a leisurely picnic.

The Dayton – Montgomery County Park District (MetroParks) was formed in 1965. As
they began to develop parks, they desired to find land to serve the suburbs south
of Dayton, but by the mid 1960's, land prices in Centerville and Washington Township
had already escalated beyond the reach of the young Park District's budget. Sugarcreek
MetroPark, in Greene County, was acquired in October 1966 to meet those needs.

There are several disabled parking sites at the Trail Center's parking lot off of
Conference Road. The public restrooms at the trail head have accessible stalls.
The drinking fountains are of the older style and work well for some, but the one
at the trail head is new and accessible for wheelchair users.

There is a level, paved path that goes from the parking lot, past the public restroom
and the new drinking fountain and makes a quarter mile loop through the scenic prairie.
A picnic shelter with an accessible table is also located just off of the path.

To get to the Main Office:
From I-675, take the Wilmington Pike exit, and go south. Follow Wilmington Pike,
past SR725, to the Park Office, on the left at 7636 Wilmington Pike.

To get to the Trail Center:
Continue past the Park Office, to the first stop sign at Conference Road. Continue
straight on Conference Road, and the Trail Center is the first area on the left
at 4178 Conference Road.

To get to Oak Camp:
continue past the Trail Center to the first stop sign at Ferry Road. Turn left on
Ferry Road, and Oak Camp will be on the left at 2471 Ferry Road.

Public Transportation
RTA Bus Routes 16 or 23
Take route 16 south through downtown to Wilmington Pike and Alex Bell Road. Walk
south for about one mile on Wilmington Pike to the park. Caution: there are no sidewalks
and traffic can be heavy. Route 23 also approaches the park.

Sugarcreek MetroPark is a very diverse area with all stages of succession, mature
forests, a trio of 500-year old white oaks, varied topography, a planted prairie,
meadows, and scenic Sugar Creek. The planted prairie provides a diverse mix of native
prairie and old-field species but requires yearly burning or mowing due to the abundance
of brambles and small trees. Visitors also will find a large meadow and two pastures.